Stop Collection
An IRS bank levy freezes your account and, after a holding period, sends the money to the IRS. There is a short window to act, and in some cases the money can be returned.
The short version. A bank levy is a one time grab, not continuous like a wage levy. When the IRS levies a bank account, the bank freezes the amount and holds it for 21 days before sending it to the IRS. That 21 day hold is your window. If you can show the levy causes hardship or that it was issued in error, the IRS can release it before the money leaves your account.
By law, your bank must hold the levied funds for 21 days before sending them to the IRS. That delay exists precisely so problems can be fixed. Acting inside those 21 days is the difference between getting the money released and losing it, so this is not something to sit on.
Move inside the 21 day hold. Each step is something you request and the IRS reviews.
If the money has not left yet, there may still be time. Send your case in for a free review and we will tell you whether a release is possible and how to ask.
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These are the controlling Internal Revenue Code sections and Internal Revenue Manual parts. Links go to the live IRS.gov pages so you can confirm every point yourself.
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A bank levy moves fast. Send the short version now and we will tell you whether the funds can still be released.
Educational review only. We do not promise any outcome, and submitting this form does not create a professional relationship.
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